DINE: Egyptian workers key element in uprising
By Philip Dine

-The Washington Times (Moonies feature labor's role, smile)

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

The extensive press coverage of the evolving situation in Egypt,
though seeming to cover every angle from the use of social media to
the nuances of the American administration's approach to the
maneuverings of the Muslim Brotherhood, is overlooking one key element
? the role of Egyptian workers and labor unions in the uprising.

While neglected by the U.S. media, labor has been pivotal in terms of
laying the groundwork for the political explosion that seemingly came
out of nowhere in the Middle East's most populous country.

"I don't think that the key thing in launching the Egyptian movement ?
or revolution if it's going to be a revolution ? was Facebook or the
Tunisian example," Stanford University Middle East specialist Joel
Beinin told me this week. "There's been 10 years of mobilization
around worker and labor issues. I think the mobilization and the
breaching of the barrier of fear is probably more significant than
Facebook or Tunisia."

In February 2010, a symposium on "Labor Protest Politics and Worker
Rights in Egypt" ? by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
and by Solidarity House, which deals with international labor issues ?
discussed worker protests of recent years. Kamal Abbas, executive
director of the Center for Trade Unions and Workers Services in Egypt,
said the Egyptian labor movement had achieved several breakthroughs in
pushing for worker rights, including strikers being met with
negotiations rather than armed police violence.

Mr. Beinin, who has spent a total of a decade studying or teaching in
Egypt, presented findings from his report, "The Struggle for Worker
Rights in Egypt." The longstanding state of emergency in Egypt had
allowed the government to massively violate labor rights, he said. Yet
the past half-dozen years had seen more than 3,000 labor actions,
including strikes and demonstrations, with 2 million workers taking
part. He called it the largest social movement in the Arab world since
World War II.

Both Mr. Beinin and Mr. Abbas said that for years outside attention
had focused largely on intellectuals or political elite pressing for
democracy, but that the building blocks of reform were more evident in
the labor movement, with hundreds of thousands of Egyptian workers
engaged in recent years in determining goals and tactics and then
peacefully expressing their demands.

David Macaray, a Los Angeles playwright and author and former union
representative who has written in recent days about labor's role in
the Egyptian drama, stated that "Egypt's labor unions deserve some
credit" for moving the country off its authoritarian dime.

"Arguably, the case can be made that Egypt's current political unrest
was inspired and energized by the actions of the country's labor
movement," Mr. Macaray wrote, calling the 3,000 protests "an
astounding number."

Egyptian labor has an interesting history. The country's workers
didn't win the right to form unions until 1942, but now about 28
percent of Egyptians workers are organized, more than double U.S.
union density.

I asked Mr. Macaray why we haven't heard any of this in the media. He
gave three possible explanations ? a media tendency to minimize the
value of labor, reporters' ignorance of the role of unions in Egypt,
or perhaps that the unions themselves "want to keep a low profile"
should the current unrest end in a crackdown.

In any case, unions often play a lead role in spurring political and
economic change ? as, for example, in the dissolution of the Warsaw
Pact, where the efforts of the Solidarity union in Poland were well
known but those of other labor groups in Eastern Europe were
overlooked.

Why can labor's efforts be so critical? Because independent labor
unions are an inherently subversive institution in authoritarian or
repressive states, since they fight for economic justice and workplace
rights. That can be particularly inconvenient for regimes that purport
to rule in the interest of ordinary people or the working class.

It's no coincidence that among the first institutions despots ban or
control are the labor movement and media. That's why I find the
conservative onslaught in this country against the U.S. labor movement
so counterproductive. It's one thing for corporate types to battle
unions on economic issues, but it's quite another for political
conservatives ? who so loudly proclaim their love of freedom ? to
disparage the very existence and value of American labor. That is, it
seems to me, a position they would do well to reconsider.

?

in solidarity jim
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to